William C Dudley: The economic outlook and the Fed's balance sheet the issue of "how" versus "when"

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "William C Dudley: The economic outlook and the Fed's balance sheet the issue of "how" versus "when""

Transcription

1 William C Dudley: The economic outlook and the Fed's balance sheet the issue of "how" versus "when" Remarks by Mr William C Dudley, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, at the Association for a Better New York Breakfast Meeting, New York, 29 July * * * It is a pleasure to have the opportunity to speak here at the Association for a Better New York. This group has obviously been very successful. New York today is a far different and vastly superior place from what I found when I first arrived as a freshman at Columbia University in Today, I d like to accomplish two tasks. First, I ll comment briefly on the economy and the economic outlook where we have been and where we may be going. I m going to suggest that the balance of risks is still tilted toward weakness in growth and employment and not toward higher inflation. I will also argue that it is premature to talk about when we are going to exit from this period of unusual policy accommodation. Second, I will talk about the impact of the Federal Reserve s lending facilities and purchase programs on the size of the Fed s balance sheet. I ll explain why an expanded balance sheet does not constrain our ability to exit from the current degree of policy accommodation. In other words, contrary to what is sometimes argued, it is not the case that our expanded balance sheet will inevitably prove inflationary. It is important that this critical issue be well understood. The public must be absolutely confident that the Fed can meet its monetary policy objectives of low and stable inflation and sustainable economic growth. Before I begin to get into these issues in earnest, let me note that, as always, the views I put forward today are my own and do not necessarily reflect the position of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) or the Federal Reserve System. Turning first to the outlook, the economic contraction appears to be waning and it seems likely that we will see moderate growth in the second half of the year. The economy should be boosted by three factors: 1) a modest recovery in housing activity and motor vehicle sales; 2) the impact of the fiscal stimulus on domestic demand; and 3) a sharp swing in the pace of inventory investment. In fact, if the inventory swing were concentrated in a particular quarter, we could see fairly rapid growth for a brief period. Regardless of the precise timing, there are a number of factors which suggest that the pace of recovery will be considerably slower than usual. In particular, I expect that consumption which accounts for about 70 percent of gross domestic product is likely to grow slowly for three reasons. First, real income growth will probably be weak by historical standards. There were a number of special factors that boosted real income in the first half of the year, helping to offset a sharp drop in hours worked and very sluggish hourly wage gains. These factors included the sharp drop in gasoline and natural gas prices; the large cost-of-living-allowance increase for Social Security recipients reflecting last year s high headline inflation; a sharp drop in final tax settlements; a reduction in withholding tax rates; and a one-time payment to Social Security recipients. These factors provided a transitory boost to real incomes, which will be absent during the second half of the year. As a result, real disposable income is likely to decline modestly over this period. Second, households are still adjusting to the sharp drop in net worth caused by the persistent decline in home prices and last year s fall in equity prices. This suggests that the desired saving rate will not decline sharply. That means consumer spending is unlikely to rise much faster than income. In other words, weak income growth will be an effective constraint on the pace of consumer spending. BIS Review 94/2009 1

2 Moreover, some sectors such as business fixed investment in structures are likely to continue to weaken as existing projects are completed. In an environment in which vacancy rates are high and climbing, prices are falling, and credit for new projects is virtually nonexistent, this sector is likely to be a significant drag on the economy over the next year. Perhaps most important, the normal cyclical dynamic in which housing, consumer durable goods purchases and investment spending rebound in response to monetary easing is unlikely to be as powerful in this episode as during a typical economic recovery. The financial system is still in the middle of a prolonged adjustment process. Banks and other financial institutions are working their way through large credit losses and the securitization markets are recovering only slowly. This means that credit availability will be constrained for some time to come and this will serve to limit the pace of recovery. If the recovery does, in fact, turn out to be lackluster, the unemployment rate is likely to remain elevated and capacity utilization rates unusually low for some time to come. This suggests that inflation will be quiescent. For all these reasons, concern about when the Fed will exit from its current accommodative monetary policy stance is, in my view, very premature. In contrast, I think it is important to address today the issue of how the Fed can exit from the current stance of policy when the time comes, even if its numerous special facilities and purchase programs continue to keep the size of its balance sheet at an expanded level. Why do I believe it is so important to explain the issue of how having just argued that when is not yet a pressing issue? The reason is that if people believe correctly or incorrectly that the Federal Reserve could have a problem managing a smooth exit from its accommodative policy stance, this belief alone could have the adverse effect of causing inflation expectations to become less well anchored and risk premia on long-dated debt securities and loans to rise. These effects could conceivably make it more difficult to generate a sustainable economic recovery. This risk seems significant. For example, just last week a major bank published a survey of a broad array of 1800 investors. Of those surveyed, 20 percent thought that inflation might average more than 2.5 percentage points per year above their assessment of the Federal Reserve s target. This outcome presumably reflects two factors the balance-sheet expansion of the Fed and the large fiscal deficit. With this in mind, let me spend the remainder of my time discussing the sources of growth in the Federal Reserve s balance sheet over the past year and a half or so, and explain why I am confident that the exit from our accommodative policy stance, as well as from our various lending facilities and purchase programs, can be handled smoothly. As you are aware, the Federal Reserve has been engaged in a wide array of unprecedented activities over the past two years in response to the financial crisis. These include: Liquidity facilities designed to improve market function. These include facilities oriented to banks and dealers such as the Term Auction Facility (TAF), Primary Dealer Credit Facility (PDCF) and the foreign exchange swap programs; and facilities designed to improve market function in impaired parts of the money and capital markets such as the Commercial Paper Funding Facility (CPFF) and the Term Asset- Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF). Purchase programs oriented to easing financial conditions. These include the agency debt, agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS) and Treasury purchase programs. Several firm-specific interventions in which the Federal Reserve has taken on illiquid asset portfolios from Bear Stearns and AIG, with the goal of managing and liquidating these asset portfolios over time in a manner that is in the best interests of the federal government and the U.S. taxpayer. 2 BIS Review 94/2009

3 These programs have led to significant changes in both the composition and size of the Federal Reserve s balance sheet. For example, in August 2007, prior to the onset of the crisis, the Federal Reserve s balance sheet was about $870 billion. Currently, the size of the balance sheet is about $2 trillion. To gain a better understanding of how we got to where we are now, I think it is useful to divide the past two years into three distinct phases. The first stage I ll define as the period running roughly from the start of the crisis in August 2007 to September During this stage, the Fed s monetary policy implementation regime worked in such a way that control over the size of its balance sheet, and more specifically over the level of excess reserves, was essential to ensure that the Open Market Desk could control the fed funds rate in a manner consistent with the FOMC s monetary policy objectives. Had the Fed s special liquidity facilities grown sufficiently large during that period, raising the level of the excess reserves in the banking system, the fed funds rate would likely have fallen far below the FOMC s target rate. To keep the fed funds rate around the target, the only sure-fire option was to avoid a significant expansion in the balance sheet by funding the expansion of nontraditional assets, such as TAF loans, FX swaps, and PDCF loans with similarly sized liquidations of the Federal Reserve s portfolio of Treasury securities. Thus, over the period from August 2007 up through the time of the Lehman Brothers failure in September 2008, the total size of the Fed s balance sheet and the level of excess reserves in the banking system changed very little. The second stage began in October 2008 when the Federal Reserve gained the authority to pay interest on reserves, including excess reserves. The addition of interest on reserves to the Fed s toolkit effectively broke the link between the size of the Fed s balance sheet and the stance of monetary policy. Policymakers now had the capacity to expand the size of the Fed s liquidity facilities and other programs without the threat of compromising the control of monetary policy. This new tool immediately proved enormously helpful. The Fed was able to respond to the deterioration of conditions in the fall of 2008 by sharply increasing the size of its Term Auction Facility program and removing the limits on the size of many of the foreign exchange swap programs. These programs, along with the increased use of the Fed s standing liquidity facilities and the start-up of the Commercial Paper Funding Facility in late October, led to a sharp growth in the Federal Reserve s balance sheet beginning in late September. The third phase is marked by the launch of the Fed s purchase programs, starting with the agency debt program that began in December 2008 and extends through to the present. During this phase, the Fed s overall balance sheet has actually declined slightly. The demand for the Fed s special liquidity programs has diminished more quickly than the purchase programs have been ramped up. Although this shrinkage was not anticipated or targeted, it is a welcome indication that there has been improvement in the functioning of the short-term funding markets. 1 As market function has improved and credit spreads have narrowed, many of the Fed s liquidity facilities have become less attractive and there has been a corresponding decline in usage. For example, outstanding foreign exchange swaps have declined from a peak of $586 billion last December to about $110 billion currently, and outstanding commercial paper held by the CPFF has fallen from a peak of about $350 billion last fall to around $110 billion currently. Despite the recent dip in the size of the balance sheet, the size of the purchase programs underway makes it likely that balance-sheet growth will resume as assets acquired in conjunction with these programs overwhelm any further declines in the funds advanced via the shorter-term liquidity facilities. The size of the Federal Reserve s balance sheet seems likely to grow to roughly $2.5 trillion, somewhat above the peak reached last December. 1 However, it was anticipated that the attractiveness of the Fed s facilities would decline as market conditions improved. In fact, it was a key element of the exit strategy that was deliberately built into the design of most of the facilities. BIS Review 94/2009 3

4 It is no coincidence that the growth of the Federal Reserve s balance sheet since last fall has been accompanied by a sharp rise in the amount of excess reserves. When the Federal Reserve extends a loan or purchases a security, this automatically adds reserves to the banking system unless the Fed undertakes an offsetting reserve draining operation. Although some of the excess reserves that have been generated by the balance-sheet expansion were initially sopped up by the Treasury s Supplemental Financing Program, total excess reserves have climbed to more than $700 billion from nearly zero at the beginning of the crisis. The sharp rise in excess reserves has caused the monetary base, which is simply the sum of currency plus total reserves, to expand significantly. The increases in excess reserves and in the monetary base generated by the Fed s balance-sheet growth have led some observers to worry that this expansion will ultimately prove inflationary. Proponents of this view say that the monetary base, the broad monetary aggregates, total credit outstanding and inflation have historically tended to move together, at least over longer time periods. Thus, if the monetary base is growing rapidly, as it has been over the past year, the view is that this growth will ultimately lead to inflation. Is this concern well founded? The answer is that in a world where banks could not be paid interest on excess reserves, these persistent high reserve balances would indeed have the potential to prove inflationary. 2 In that world, the excess reserves are likely to lead ultimately to an overly accommodative monetary policy. The story goes like this: If banks are earning no interest on their excess reserve holdings, they will be willing to lend those reserves out to any creditworthy borrowers as long as the interest rate is positive after adjusting for risk. The borrowers would then spend these monies, thereby boosting economic activity. The funds would not disappear, but instead would flow back into the banking system as they were deposited by those who had received the income generated by the increase in spending, thus replenishing the reserves that had been lent out in the first round of lending. This would result in a new stock of excess reserves that would then lead to a second round of credit creation and a further increase in economic activity. This cycling of excess reserves into credit creation, and the corresponding increase in economic activity, would continue until the excess reserves were fully absorbed by an increase in currency outstanding and/or an increase in required reserves associated with the rise in the amount of banking deposits. Inflation would rise as the excessive credit creation generated by the excess reserves led to an overheated economy and a rise in inflation expectations. But that is not the world in which we now live. Because the Federal Reserve now has the ability to pay interest on excess reserves (IOER), it also now has the ability to prevent excess reserves from leading to excessive credit creation. Because the Federal Reserve is the safest of counterparties, the IOER rate effectively becomes the risk-free rate. 3 By raising that rate, the Federal Reserve raises the cost of credit more generally because banks will not lend at rates below the IOER rate when they can instead hold their excess reserves on deposit with the Fed. Because banks no longer seek to lend out their excess reserves, there is no increase in the amount of credit outstanding, no redeposit of the excess reserves, no increase in economic activity and no risk that excessive credit creation will fuel an inflationary spiral. 2 3 That rate is unlikely to spur too much lending right now given the constraints on credit availability, but at some future date it undoubtedly would be too low once the recovery is sufficiently advanced and credit conditions improved. For a more detailed discussion of monetary policy implementation under a regime in which the central bank pays interest on reserves, see: Todd Keister, Antoine Martin, and James J. McAndrews (2008), "Divorcing Money from Monetary Policy," Federal Reserve Bank of New York Economic Policy Review, Vol. 14 (2), 41-56; and Todd Keister and James J. McAndrews (2009), "Why Are Banks Holding So Many Excess Reserves?" Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Reports, no BIS Review 94/2009

5 For this dynamic to work correctly, the Federal Reserve needs to set an IOER rate consistent with the amount of required reserves, money supply and credit outstanding consistent with its dual mandate of full employment and price stability. If demand for credit exceeds what is appropriate, the Federal Reserve raises the IOER rate to reduce demand. If the demand for credit is insufficient to push the economy to full employment, then the Federal Reserve reduces the IOER rate, recognizing that the IOER rate cannot fall below zero. This does not differ much from how the Federal Reserve has behaved historically set the fed funds rate at a level consistent with the desired level of economic activity and inflation over time. So how does the IOER rate relate to the fed funds rate? The two rates are likely to track each other closely in most circumstances. 4 First, banks generally do not have any incentive to sell fed funds at rates below the IOER rate. Only nondepository institutions such as the government sponsored enterprises (GSEs) that can buy and sell fed funds but are not able to hold excess reserves with the Fed, might have an incentive to sell fed funds at rates below the IOER rate. But even in this case, the fed funds rate would not likely fall far below the IOER rate. After all, if the fed funds rate were to fall significantly below the IOER rate, banks could purchase the fed funds and hold them as reserves with the Fed, earning the difference. The ability of banks to engage in arbitrage should limit the size of the deviations between the IOER rate and the fed funds rate. Thus, through the IOER rate, the Federal Reserve can effectively retain control of monetary policy. In addition to paying interest on excess reserves, the Federal Reserve also has the ability to drain the excess reserves from the banking system. This can be done in a variety of ways: reverse repo transactions with dealers and other counterparties, securities sales from the Fed s portfolio or bill issuance by the Treasury, with the funds deposited at the Federal Reserve. Although our ability to pay interest on excess reserves is sufficient to retain control of monetary policy, it is not bad policy to have both a belt and suspenders in place. As a result, we are working out ways to drain reserves to provide reassurance that we will not under any circumstance lose control of monetary policy. A related concern is the question of whether the Federal Reserve will be able to act quickly enough once it determines that it is time to raise rates. This concern reflects the view that the excess reserves sitting on banks balance sheets are essentially dry tinder that could quickly fuel excessive credit creation and put the Fed behind the curve in tightening monetary policy. In terms of imagery, this concern seems compelling the banks sitting on piles of money that could be used to extend credit on a moment s notice. However, this reasoning ignores a very important point. Based on how monetary policy has been conducted for several decades, banks have always had the ability to expand credit whenever they like. They don t need a pile of dry tinder in the form of excess reserves to do so. That is because the Federal Reserve has committed itself to supply sufficient reserves to keep the fed funds rate at its target. If banks want to expand credit and that drives up the demand for reserves, the Fed automatically meets that demand in its conduct of monetary policy. In terms of the ability to expand credit rapidly, it makes no difference whether the banks have lots of excess reserves or not. Another source of concern among some market participants has been the Federal Reserve s purchase of Treasury securities. The worry here is that the Federal Reserve s purchases are monetizing the debt and that therefore these purchases will ultimately prove inflationary. 4 In a world of excess reserves and a positive IOER, either the IOER or the fed funds rate could conceivably be used as the primary instrument of monetary policy. The Federal Reserve would have precise control over the IOER and this would lead to some variability in the actual fed funds rate. This would not be much of a departure from the recent past in which the actual fed funds rate has tended to fluctuate closely around the fed funds target. BIS Review 94/2009 5

6 Regarding the Fed s Treasury purchase program, I want to make two points. First, with the fed funds rate constrained at zero lower bound, policymakers needed to find other ways to stimulate economic activity. The agency debt and agency MBS purchase programs proved effective in narrowing credit spreads in the debt and MBS market, but the Federal Reserve would have encountered diminishing returns in terms of impaired market function if it had raised the sizes of these two programs further. This suggested that the best course to hold down mortgage rates and other private borrowing rates would be to engage in a Treasury purchase program that would put downward pressure on Treasury rates. In this regard, the Fed s purchases have not been motivated by accommodating an expansive fiscal policy and the large fiscal deficits that are its consequence. I can assure you that the Federal Reserve will never engage in a program to accommodate or facilitate an unsustainable fiscal policy program. Instead, these programs were designed to help ease financial conditions at a time that the Federal Reserve could not push the fed funds rate below zero. Second, the program is small. So even if one were to take a darker view of what the Federal Reserve has done, it is important to put the purchase program in context. Even after completion of a purchase program of up to $300 billion of Treasuries, the Federal Reserve s holdings of Treasuries will be smaller than they had been in August 2007 on the eve of the crisis. Moreover, as a share of Treasuries outstanding, the Fed s share will be the lowest since the early 1990s. Overall, the Federal Reserve s balance-sheet expansion has had notable benefits. The asset purchase programs have helped to keep longer-term private interest rates relatively low, and the expansion of liquidity facilities has helped to restore more normal market function. However, this does not mean that the Federal Reserve balance-sheet expansion and Treasury purchase program are cost free, only that the benefits of these programs, individually and collectively, are seen as exceeding the potential costs. Nevertheless, there are three issues on the cost side that deserve note. First, policymakers need to take seriously any concerns that the Fed s actions might conceivably lead to an inflation problem. After all, inflation is driven mainly by two variables inflation expectations and the degree of pressure on resources. It would be potentially very damaging if any of the Fed s programs were to unhinge inflation expectations. One risk with embarking on the Treasury purchase program was that it had the potential to create the misperception that the Fed was providing the fiscal authorities with the means to fund a more stimulative fiscal policy than they would otherwise have been able to finance. This misperception around the intent and purpose of the program could have undermined the Fed s credibility and triggered a damaging rise in inflation expectations. Indeed, one of my primary goals for this speech is to make it clear that we have not compromised our ability or our commitment to keep inflation in check. Keeping inflation and inflation expectations well anchored around a low level is essential. Second, the Federal Reserve s balance-sheet expansion does have a consequence for the balance sheet of the banking system. The increase in the amount of excess reserves has to be held by banks. Excess reserves are a risk-free asset that they may not wish to hold. More important, to the extent that the banks worry about their overall leverage ratios, it is possible that a large increase in excess reserves could conceivably diminish the willingness of banks to lend. At present, these balance-sheet issues do not appear to be having a meaningful effect on bank behavior. In fact, the excess reserves serve as a liquidity buffer that many banks find attractive in the current environment. But that does not mean we can ignore this issue. We need to keep this issue in mind as we contemplate how much balance-sheet expansion might be appropriate. Third, the Federal Reserve is taking on some interest-rate risk in terms of its balance sheet. The excess reserves have an overnight maturity. These liabilities are being used to purchase longer-term assets. In principle, if short-term interest rates were to move up very sharply, the 6 BIS Review 94/2009

7 cost of funding could eventually exceed the return on the Fed s assets. The bigger our balance sheet, the greater the amount of interest-rate risk we are assuming. We have examined this issue in detail. Suffice it to say, it is conceivable that the Federal Reserve s net-interest margin could be pinched in certain environments say if the economic recovery turned out to be very robust. But our analysis shows that it is extremely unlikely that the Fed s net-interest margin will turn negative. In part, that is due to the fact that the balance-sheet risk associated with the interest-rate mismatch is offset to a large degree by the fact that the cost of much of the Fed s liabilities the amount of currency outstanding is zero. So when short-term rates rise, the cost of a significant portion of the Fed s liabilities is unaffected. Making policy during a crisis involves making tough choices. Perfect solutions are not always achievable or even legally feasible. I can assure you that our decisions have been made carefully, always with an eye toward finding the right balance between the risks and rewards of alternative options. Most critical is our commitment never to take actions that might compromise our ability to retain our control of monetary policy and that might undermine our ability to achieve our dual mandate of full employment and price stability. Thank you for your kind attention. I would be very happy to take a few questions. BIS Review 94/2009 7

William C Dudley: A bit better, but very far from best US economic outlook and the challenges facing the Federal Reserve

William C Dudley: A bit better, but very far from best US economic outlook and the challenges facing the Federal Reserve William C Dudley: A bit better, but very far from best US economic outlook and the challenges facing the Federal Reserve Remarks by Mr William C Dudley, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Federal

More information

Brian P Sack: Managing the Federal Reserve s balance sheet

Brian P Sack: Managing the Federal Reserve s balance sheet Brian P Sack: Managing the Federal Reserve s balance sheet Remarks by Mr Brian P Sack, Executive Vice President of the Markets Group of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, at the 2010 Chartered Financial

More information

Brian P Sack: Implementing the Federal Reserve s asset purchase program

Brian P Sack: Implementing the Federal Reserve s asset purchase program Brian P Sack: Implementing the Federal Reserve s asset purchase program Remarks by Mr Brian P Sack, Executive Vice President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, at the Global Interdependence Center

More information

William C Dudley: The Federal Reserve's liquidity facilities

William C Dudley: The Federal Reserve's liquidity facilities William C Dudley: The Federal Reserve's liquidity facilities Remarks by Mr William C Dudley, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, at the Vanderbilt University

More information

Implications of Fiscal Austerity for U.S. Monetary Policy

Implications of Fiscal Austerity for U.S. Monetary Policy Implications of Fiscal Austerity for U.S. Monetary Policy Eric S. Rosengren President & Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Boston The Global Interdependence Center Central Banking Conference

More information

Brian P Sack: The SOMA portfolio at $2.654 trillion

Brian P Sack: The SOMA portfolio at $2.654 trillion Brian P Sack: The SOMA portfolio at $2.654 trillion Remarks by Mr Brian P Sack, Executive Vice President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, before the Money Marketeers of New York University, New

More information

Joseph S Tracy: A strategy for the 2011 economic recovery

Joseph S Tracy: A strategy for the 2011 economic recovery Joseph S Tracy: A strategy for the 2011 economic recovery Remarks by Mr Joseph S Tracy, Executive Vice President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, at Dominican College, Orangeburg, New York, 28

More information

Finland falling further behind euro area growth

Finland falling further behind euro area growth BANK OF FINLAND FORECAST Finland falling further behind euro area growth 30 JUN 2015 2:00 PM BANK OF FINLAND BULLETIN 3/2015 ECONOMIC OUTLOOK Economic growth in Finland has been slow for a prolonged period,

More information

Economic Outlook, January 2016 Jeffrey M. Lacker President, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond

Economic Outlook, January 2016 Jeffrey M. Lacker President, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Outlook, January 2016 Jeffrey M. Lacker President, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Annual Meeting of the South Carolina Business & Industry Political Education Committee Columbia, South Carolina

More information

Past, Present and Future: The Macroeconomy and Federal Reserve Actions

Past, Present and Future: The Macroeconomy and Federal Reserve Actions Past, Present and Future: The Macroeconomy and Federal Reserve Actions Financial Planning Association of Minnesota Golden Valley, Minnesota January 15, 2013 Narayana Kocherlakota President Federal Reserve

More information

The Economic Outlook and The Fed s Roles in Monetary Policy and Financial Stability

The Economic Outlook and The Fed s Roles in Monetary Policy and Financial Stability 1 The Economic Outlook and The Fed s Roles in Monetary Policy and Financial Stability Main Line Chamber of Commerce Economic Forecast Breakfast Philadelphia Country Club, Gladwyne, PA January 8, 2008 Charles

More information

Normalizing Monetary Policy

Normalizing Monetary Policy Normalizing Monetary Policy Martin Feldstein The current focus of Federal Reserve policy is on normalization of monetary policy that is, on increasing short-term interest rates and shrinking the size of

More information

Estimating Key Economic Variables: The Policy Implications

Estimating Key Economic Variables: The Policy Implications EMBARGOED UNTIL 11:45 A.M. Eastern Time on Saturday, October 7, 2017 OR UPON DELIVERY Estimating Key Economic Variables: The Policy Implications Eric S. Rosengren President & Chief Executive Officer Federal

More information

Central Bank Balance Sheets: Misconceptions and Realities

Central Bank Balance Sheets: Misconceptions and Realities EMBARGOED UNTIL 8:30 P.M. on Monday, March 25, 2019, U.S. Eastern Time, which is 8:30 A.M. on Tuesday, March 26, 2019 in Hong Kong, OR UPON DELIVERY Central Bank Balance Sheets: Misconceptions and Realities

More information

The U.S. Economy and Monetary Policy. Esther L. George President and Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City

The U.S. Economy and Monetary Policy. Esther L. George President and Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City The U.S. Economy and Monetary Policy Esther L. George President and Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Central Exchange Kansas City, Missouri January 10, 2013 The views expressed

More information

Three Lessons for Monetary Policy from the Panic of 2008

Three Lessons for Monetary Policy from the Panic of 2008 Three Lessons for Monetary Policy from the Panic of 2008 James Bullard President and CEO Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis The Philadelphia Fed Policy Forum December 4, 2009 Any opinions expressed here

More information

Improving the Outlook with Better Monetary Policy. Bloomington, Eden Prairie, Edina and Richfield Chambers of Commerce Edina, Minnesota March 27, 2013

Improving the Outlook with Better Monetary Policy. Bloomington, Eden Prairie, Edina and Richfield Chambers of Commerce Edina, Minnesota March 27, 2013 Improving the Outlook with Better Monetary Policy Bloomington, Eden Prairie, Edina and Richfield Chambers of Commerce Edina, Minnesota March 27, 2013 Narayana Kocherlakota President Federal Reserve Bank

More information

Gauging Current Conditions:

Gauging Current Conditions: Gauging Current Conditions: The Economic Outlook and Its Impact on Workers Compensation Vol. 2 2005 The gauges below indicate the economic outlook for the current year and for 2006 for factors that typically

More information

2014 Annual Review & Outlook

2014 Annual Review & Outlook 2014 Annual Review & Outlook As we enter 2014, the current economic expansion is 4.5 years in duration, roughly the average life of U.S. economic expansions. There is every reason to believe it will continue,

More information

Are we on the road to recovery?

Are we on the road to recovery? Are we on the road to recovery? Transcript Catherine Gordon: Hi, I m Catherine Gordon. We re here with Joe Davis, Vanguard s chief economist, to talk about economic trends and the outlook for the rest

More information

Ms Hessius comments on the inflation target and the state of the economy in Sweden

Ms Hessius comments on the inflation target and the state of the economy in Sweden Ms Hessius comments on the inflation target and the state of the economy in Sweden Speech given by Ms Kerstin Hessius, Deputy Governor of the Sveriges Riksbank, before the Swedish Economic Association,

More information

Alternatives for Reserve Balances and the Fed s Balance Sheet in the Future. John B. Taylor 1. June 2017

Alternatives for Reserve Balances and the Fed s Balance Sheet in the Future. John B. Taylor 1. June 2017 Alternatives for Reserve Balances and the Fed s Balance Sheet in the Future John B. Taylor 1 June 2017 Since this is a session on the Fed s balance sheet, I begin by looking at the Fed s balance sheet

More information

Financial System Stabilized, but Exit, Reform, and Fiscal Challenges Lie Ahead

Financial System Stabilized, but Exit, Reform, and Fiscal Challenges Lie Ahead January 21 Financial System Stabilized, but Exit, Reform, and Fiscal Challenges Lie Ahead Systemic risks have continued to subside as economic fundamentals have improved and substantial public support

More information

Get up off the floor

Get up off the floor Get up off the floor Remarks at Currencies, Capital, and Central Bank Balances: A Policy Conference Panel on the Future of the Central Bank Balance Sheet Hoover Institution Bill Nelson 1 May 4, 2018 Thank

More information

The U.S. Economy: An Optimistic Outlook, But With Some Important Risks

The U.S. Economy: An Optimistic Outlook, But With Some Important Risks EMBARGOED UNTIL 8:10 A.M. Eastern Time on Friday, April 13, 2018 OR UPON DELIVERY The U.S. Economy: An Optimistic Outlook, But With Some Important Risks Eric S. Rosengren President & Chief Executive Officer

More information

FRBSF ECONOMIC LETTER

FRBSF ECONOMIC LETTER FRBSF ECONOMIC LETTER 2011-11 April 11, 2011 The Fed s Interest Rate Risk BY GLENN D. RUDEBUSCH To make financial conditions more supportive of economic growth, the Federal Reserve has purchased large

More information

Observation. January 18, credit availability, credit

Observation. January 18, credit availability, credit January 18, 11 HIGHLIGHTS Underlying the improvement in economic indicators over the last several months has been growing signs that the economy is also seeing a recovery in credit conditions. The mortgage

More information

Balance-Sheet Adjustments and the Global Economy

Balance-Sheet Adjustments and the Global Economy November 16, 2009 Bank of Japan Balance-Sheet Adjustments and the Global Economy Speech at the Paris EUROPLACE Financial Forum in Tokyo Masaaki Shirakawa Governor of the Bank of Japan Introduction Thank

More information

Federal Reserve Monetary Policy Since the Financial Crisis

Federal Reserve Monetary Policy Since the Financial Crisis Federal Reserve Monetary Policy Since the Financial Crisis Hitotsubashi-IMF Seminar 23 January 2014 Ellen E. Meade Senior Adviser Division of Monetary Affairs Federal Reserve Board Overview 1. Central

More information

The Financial Sector

The Financial Sector Brad Smith January 30, 2009 The Financial Sector Yield Curve The yield curve has maintained its steepness over the past sixth months and has continued to be depressed on both short and long ends. With

More information

The Economy, Inflation, and Monetary Policy

The Economy, Inflation, and Monetary Policy The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily those of the Federal Reserve System or the FOMC. Good afternoon, I m pleased to be here today. I am also delighted to be in Philadelphia. While

More information

Goal-Based Monetary Policy Report 1

Goal-Based Monetary Policy Report 1 Goal-Based Monetary Policy Report 1 Financial Planning Association Golden Valley, Minnesota January 16, 2015 Narayana Kocherlakota President Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis 1 Thanks to David Fettig,

More information

How Will the Federal Reserve Adjust Its Balance Sheet During Policy Normalization? 12/10/2015

How Will the Federal Reserve Adjust Its Balance Sheet During Policy Normalization? 12/10/2015 FOR PROFESSIONAL INVESTORS How Will the Federal Reserve Adjust Its Balance Sheet During Policy Normalization? 12/10/2015 INTRODUCTION Market participants remain highly focused on prospects for the Federal

More information

January minutes: key signaling language

January minutes: key signaling language Trend Macrolytics, LLC Donald Luskin, Chief Investment Officer Thomas Demas, Managing Director Michael Warren, Energy Strategist Data Insights: FOMC Minutes Wednesday, February 20, 2019 January minutes:

More information

Simon M Potter: Recent developments in monetary policy implementation

Simon M Potter: Recent developments in monetary policy implementation Simon M Potter: Recent developments in monetary policy implementation Remarks by Mr Simon M Potter, Executive Vice President of the Markets Group of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, before the Money

More information

Thoughts about the Outlook

Thoughts about the Outlook Thoughts about the Outlook Narayana Kocherlakota President Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis White Bear Lake Area Chamber of Commerce White Bear Lake, Minnesota April 12, 2012 Thank you for that generous

More information

Haruhiko Kuroda: Japan s economy and monetary policy

Haruhiko Kuroda: Japan s economy and monetary policy Haruhiko Kuroda: Japan s economy and monetary policy Speech by Mr Haruhiko Kuroda, Governor of the Bank of Japan, at a meeting with business leaders, Osaka, 28 September 2015. Introduction * * * It is

More information

Philip Lowe: Changing relative prices and the structure of the Australian economy

Philip Lowe: Changing relative prices and the structure of the Australian economy Philip Lowe: Changing relative prices and the structure of the Australian economy Address by Mr Philip Lowe, Assistant Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia, to the Australian Industry Group 11th Annual

More information

The Economic Recovery and Monetary Policy: Taking the First Step Towards the Long Run

The Economic Recovery and Monetary Policy: Taking the First Step Towards the Long Run The Economic Recovery and Monetary Policy: Taking the First Step Towards the Long Run Esther L. George President and Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Santa Fe, New Mexico June

More information

RECENT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS IN SOUTH AFRICA

RECENT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS IN SOUTH AFRICA RECENT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS IN SOUTH AFRICA Remarks by Mr AD Mminele, Deputy Governor of the South African Reserve Bank, at the Citigroup Global Issues Seminar, held at the Ritz Carlton Hotel in Istanbul,

More information

Views on the Economy and Price-Level Targeting

Views on the Economy and Price-Level Targeting Views on the Economy and Price-Level Targeting Raphael Bostic President and Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Atlanta Economics Club Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Atlanta, Georgia

More information

Ric Battellino: Recent financial developments

Ric Battellino: Recent financial developments Ric Battellino: Recent financial developments Address by Mr Ric Battellino, Deputy Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia, at the Annual Stockbrokers Conference, Sydney, 26 May 2011. * * * Introduction

More information

made available a few days after the next regularly scheduled and the Board's Annual Report. The summary descriptions of

made available a few days after the next regularly scheduled and the Board's Annual Report. The summary descriptions of FEDERAL RESERVE press release For Use at 4:00 p.m. October 20, 1978 The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Open Market Committee today released the attached record of policy

More information

Monetary Policy in a New Environment: The U.S. Experience

Monetary Policy in a New Environment: The U.S. Experience Robert T. Parry President and Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Prepared for delivery to the Conference Recent Developments in Financial Systems and Their Challenges for Economic

More information

Monetary Policy and Financial Stability

Monetary Policy and Financial Stability Monetary Policy and Financial Stability Charles I. Plosser President and Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia The 26 th Annual Monetary and Trade Conference Presented by: The Global

More information

THE FED AND ECONOMY. Fixed Income Commentary

THE FED AND ECONOMY. Fixed Income Commentary Fixed Income Commentary Portfolio Strategies & Analytics Group June 15, 2009 Tom Wammack Institutional Fixed Income Director Portfolio Strategies & Analytics Group (615) 341-6020 twammack@rwbaird.com In

More information

I ll start by setting the scene. The policy of a near-zero federal funds rate has been

I ll start by setting the scene. The policy of a near-zero federal funds rate has been Consumer Outlook: A Linchpin of Growth Dennis Lockhart President and Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Baton Rouge Rotary Luncheon Baton Rouge, Louisiana May 6, 2015 Atlanta Fed President

More information

Daniel Mminele: Thoughts on South Africa s monetary policy

Daniel Mminele: Thoughts on South Africa s monetary policy Daniel Mminele: Thoughts on South Africa s monetary policy Address by Mr Daniel Mminele, Deputy Governor of the South African Reserve Bank, at the JP Morgan Investor Conference, Washington DC, 16 April

More information

ASSESSING THE RISK OF A DOUBLE-DIP RECESSION: KEY INDICATORS TO MONITOR

ASSESSING THE RISK OF A DOUBLE-DIP RECESSION: KEY INDICATORS TO MONITOR Weekly Economic Perspective ASSESSING THE RISK OF A DOUBLE-DIP RECESSION: KEY INDICATORS TO MONITOR August 2, 2010 Robert F. DeLucia, CFA Consulting Economist Summary and Major Conclusions: Heightened

More information

Egil Matsen: The equity share in the Government Pension Fund Global

Egil Matsen: The equity share in the Government Pension Fund Global Egil Matsen: The equity share in the Government Pension Fund Global Introductory statement by Mr Egil Matsen, Governor of Norges Bank (Central Bank of Norway), Oslo, 1 December 2016. Accompanying slides

More information

RESPONSES TO SURVEY OF

RESPONSES TO SURVEY OF RESPONSES TO SURVEY OF PRIMARY DEALERS Markets Group, Federal Reserve Bank of New York RESPONSES TO SURVEY OF a v JUNE Distributed: 5/31/ Received by: 6/4/ The Survey of Primary Dealers is formulated by

More information

Christopher Kent: Financial conditions and the Australian dollar - recent developments

Christopher Kent: Financial conditions and the Australian dollar - recent developments Christopher Kent: Financial conditions and the Australian dollar - recent developments Address by Mr Christopher Kent, Assistant Governor (Financial Markets) of the Reserve Bank of Australia, to the XE

More information

Empirically Evaluating Economic Policy in Real Time. The Martin Feldstein Lecture 1 National Bureau of Economic Research July 10, John B.

Empirically Evaluating Economic Policy in Real Time. The Martin Feldstein Lecture 1 National Bureau of Economic Research July 10, John B. Empirically Evaluating Economic Policy in Real Time The Martin Feldstein Lecture 1 National Bureau of Economic Research July 10, 2009 John B. Taylor To honor Martin Feldstein s distinguished leadership

More information

Ben S Bernanke: Federal Reserve policies in the financial crisis

Ben S Bernanke: Federal Reserve policies in the financial crisis Ben S Bernanke: Federal Reserve policies in the financial crisis Speech by Mr Ben S Bernanke, Chairman of the Board of Governors of the US Federal Reserve System, at the Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce,

More information

Lars Nyberg: Developments in the property market

Lars Nyberg: Developments in the property market Lars Nyberg: Developments in the property market Speech by Mr Lars Nyberg, Deputy Governor of the Sveriges Riksbank, at Fastighetsvärlden (Swedish newspaper), Stockholm, 30 May 2007. * * * I would like

More information

The Economics of the Federal Budget Deficit

The Economics of the Federal Budget Deficit Brian W. Cashell Specialist in Macroeconomic Policy February 2, 2010 Congressional Research Service CRS Report for Congress Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress 7-5700 www.crs.gov RL31235 Summary

More information

Mr Bäckström elucidates the economic situation in Sweden and describes the consequences it may have for future monetary policy

Mr Bäckström elucidates the economic situation in Sweden and describes the consequences it may have for future monetary policy Mr Bäckström elucidates the economic situation in Sweden and describes the consequences it may have for future monetary policy Speech given by Mr Urban Bäckström, Governor of the Sveriges Riksbank at Föreningssparbanken,

More information

THE NEW ECONOMY RECESSION: ECONOMIC SCORECARD 2001

THE NEW ECONOMY RECESSION: ECONOMIC SCORECARD 2001 THE NEW ECONOMY RECESSION: ECONOMIC SCORECARD 2001 By Dean Baker December 20, 2001 Now that it is officially acknowledged that a recession has begun, most economists are predicting that it will soon be

More information

Monetary Policy as the Economy Approaches the Fed s Dual Mandate

Monetary Policy as the Economy Approaches the Fed s Dual Mandate EMBARGOED UNTIL Wednesday, February 15, 2017 at 1:10 P.M., U.S. Eastern Time OR UPON DELIVERY Monetary Policy as the Economy Approaches the Fed s Dual Mandate Eric S. Rosengren President & Chief Executive

More information

Charles I Plosser: Economic outlook

Charles I Plosser: Economic outlook Charles I Plosser: Economic outlook Speech by Mr Charles I Plosser, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, at the Business Leaders Forum, Villanova School of

More information

U.S. Monetary Policy Objectives in the Short and Long Run 1

U.S. Monetary Policy Objectives in the Short and Long Run 1 Presentation to the Andrew Brimmer Policy Forum IBEFA/ASSA Meeting San Francisco, CA By Janet L. Yellen, President and CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco For delivery on January 4, 2009, 2:30 PM

More information

Growth and inflation in OECD and Sweden 1999 and 2000 forecast Percentage annual change

Growth and inflation in OECD and Sweden 1999 and 2000 forecast Percentage annual change Mr Heikensten talks about the interaction between monetary and fiscal policy and labour market developments Speech by Lars Heikensten, First Deputy Governor of the Sveriges Riksbank, the Swedish central

More information

1. Inflation target policy how does it work?

1. Inflation target policy how does it work? Mr. Heikensten discusses recent economic and monetary policy developments in Sweden Speech by the Deputy Governor of the Bank of Sweden, Mr. Lars Heikensten, at the Local Authorities Economics Seminar

More information

The Future Performance of the Canadian Economy

The Future Performance of the Canadian Economy Remarks by Gordon Thiessen Governor of the Bank of Canada to the Canadian Club of Winnipeg Winnipeg, Manitoba 25 March 1998 The Future Performance of the Canadian Economy It can take anywhere from one

More information

Outlook for Economic Activity and Prices (April 2010)

Outlook for Economic Activity and Prices (April 2010) April 30, 2010 Bank of Japan Outlook for Economic Activity and Prices (April 2010) The Bank's View 1 The global economy has emerged from the sharp deterioration triggered by the financial crisis and has

More information

Implementation and Transmission of Monetary Policy

Implementation and Transmission of Monetary Policy The Federal Reserve in the 21 st Century Implementation and Transmission of Monetary Policy Argia M. Sbordone, Vice President Research and Statistics Group March 21, 2016 The views expressed in this presentation

More information

William C Dudley: Financial conditions indexes a new look after the financial crisis

William C Dudley: Financial conditions indexes a new look after the financial crisis William C Dudley: Financial conditions indexes a new look after the financial crisis Remarks by Mr William C Dudley, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, at the

More information

Haruhiko Kuroda: How to overcome deflation

Haruhiko Kuroda: How to overcome deflation Haruhiko Kuroda: How to overcome deflation Speech by Mr Haruhiko Kuroda, Governor of the Bank of Japan, at a conference, held by the London School of Economics and Political Science, London, 21 March 2014.

More information

Monetary Policy and the Economic Outlook: A Fine Balancing Act

Monetary Policy and the Economic Outlook: A Fine Balancing Act Monetary Policy and the Economic Outlook: A Fine Balancing Act Remarks by JOHN C. WILLIAMS President and CEO Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco At the 54 th Annual Economic Forecast Luncheon Phoenix,

More information

Maneuvering Past Stagflation: Prospects for the U.S. Economy In

Maneuvering Past Stagflation: Prospects for the U.S. Economy In Maneuvering Past Stagflation: Prospects for the U.S. Economy In 2007-2008 By Michael Mussa Senior Fellow The Peter G. Peterson Institute for International Economics Washington, DC Presented at the annual

More information

UPDATE ON GLOBAL PROSPECTS AND POLICY CHALLENGES

UPDATE ON GLOBAL PROSPECTS AND POLICY CHALLENGES G R O U P O F T W E N T Y UPDATE ON GLOBAL PROSPECTS AND POLICY CHALLENGES G-20 Leaders Summit September 5 6, 2013 St. Petersburg Prepared by Staff of the I N T E R N A T I O N A L M O N E T A R Y F U

More information

Out of the Shadows: Projected Levels for Future REO Inventory

Out of the Shadows: Projected Levels for Future REO Inventory ECONOMIC COMMENTARY Number 2010-14 October 19, 2010 Out of the Shadows: Projected Levels for Future REO Inventory Guhan Venkatu Nearly one homeowner in ten is more than 90 days delinquent on his mortgage

More information

Monetary Policymaking in Today s Environment: Finding Policy Space in a Low-Rate World

Monetary Policymaking in Today s Environment: Finding Policy Space in a Low-Rate World EMBARGOED UNTIL 8:00 P.M. Eastern Time on Monday, April, 15 2019 OR UPON DELIVERY Monetary Policymaking in Today s Environment: Finding Policy Space in a Low-Rate World Eric S. Rosengren President & Chief

More information

Haruhiko Kuroda: Moving forward Japan s economy under Quantitative and Qualitative Monetary Easing

Haruhiko Kuroda: Moving forward Japan s economy under Quantitative and Qualitative Monetary Easing Haruhiko Kuroda: Moving forward Japan s economy under Quantitative and Qualitative Monetary Easing Speech by Mr Haruhiko Kuroda, Governor of the Bank of Japan, at the Japan Society, New York City, 26 August

More information

Reconciling FOMC Forecasts and Forward Guidance. Mickey D. Levy Blenheim Capital Management

Reconciling FOMC Forecasts and Forward Guidance. Mickey D. Levy Blenheim Capital Management Reconciling FOMC Forecasts and Forward Guidance Mickey D. Levy Blenheim Capital Management Prepared for Shadow Open Market Committee September 20, 2013 Reconciling FOMC Forecasts and Forward Guidance Mickey

More information

Ben S Bernanke: The US economic outlook

Ben S Bernanke: The US economic outlook Ben S Bernanke: The US economic outlook Speech by Mr Ben S Bernanke, Chairman of the Board of Governors of the US Federal Reserve System, at the Economic Club of Minnesota Luncheon, Minneapolis, Minnesota,

More information

Economic Outlook, January 2015 January 9, Jeffrey M. Lacker President Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond

Economic Outlook, January 2015 January 9, Jeffrey M. Lacker President Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Outlook, January 2015 January 9, 2015 Jeffrey M. Lacker President Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Virginia Bankers Association and Virginia Chamber of Commerce 2015 Financial Forecast Richmond,

More information

Ben S Bernanke: Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress

Ben S Bernanke: Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress Ben S Bernanke: Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress Testimony of Mr Ben S Bernanke, Chairman of the Board of Governors of the US Federal Reserve System, before the Committee on Banking, Housing,

More information

Charles I Plosser: Strengthening our monetary policy framework through commitment, credibility, and communication

Charles I Plosser: Strengthening our monetary policy framework through commitment, credibility, and communication Charles I Plosser: Strengthening our monetary policy framework through commitment, credibility, and communication Speech by Mr Charles I Plosser, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Reserve

More information

Threading the Needle. Esther L. George President and Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City

Threading the Needle. Esther L. George President and Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Threading the Needle Esther L. George President and Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City July 17, 2018 Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Agricultural Symposium Kansas City, Mo.

More information

COMMENTARY NUMBER 462 June Trade Balance, Consumer Credit. August 9, Bernanke Bemoans GDP Not Reflecting Common Experience

COMMENTARY NUMBER 462 June Trade Balance, Consumer Credit. August 9, Bernanke Bemoans GDP Not Reflecting Common Experience COMMENTARY NUMBER 462 June Trade Balance, Consumer Credit August 9, 2012 Bernanke Bemoans GDP Not Reflecting Common Experience Trade Data Place Upside Pressure on Second-Quarter GDP Revision Consumer Credit

More information

The Implications of an Inverted Yield Curve

The Implications of an Inverted Yield Curve What to Make of the Flattening Yield Curve Yield curve has flattened significantly; 2yr10yr spread has compressed from a peak of 2.91% An inverted yield curve has proven to be most accurate indicator of

More information

Chapter 10. Conduct of Monetary Policy: Tools, Goals, Strategy, and Tactics. Chapter Preview

Chapter 10. Conduct of Monetary Policy: Tools, Goals, Strategy, and Tactics. Chapter Preview Chapter 10 Conduct of Monetary Policy: Tools, Goals, Strategy, and Tactics Chapter Preview Monetary policy refers to the management of the money supply. The theories guiding the Federal Reserve are complex

More information

November minutes: key signaling language

November minutes: key signaling language Trend Macrolytics, LLC Donald Luskin, Chief Investment Officer Thomas Demas, Managing Director Michael Warren, Energy Strategist Data Insights: FOMC Minutes Thursday, November 29, 2018 November minutes:

More information

Comments on Monetary Policy at the Effective Lower Bound

Comments on Monetary Policy at the Effective Lower Bound BPEA, September 13-14, 2018 Comments on Monetary Policy at the Effective Lower Bound Janet Yellen, Distinguished Fellow in Residence Hutchins Center on Fiscal and Monetary Policy, Brookings Institution

More information

Policy Alternatives for a Return to Full Employment in Spain

Policy Alternatives for a Return to Full Employment in Spain November 2013 Policy Alternatives for a Return to Full Employment in Spain By David Rosnick and Mark Weisbrot * Center for Economic and Policy Research 1611 Connecticut Ave. NW Suite 400 Washington, DC

More information

FINANCIAL MARKETS REPORT SUPPLEMENT

FINANCIAL MARKETS REPORT SUPPLEMENT FINANCIAL MARKETS REPORT SUPPLEMENT Changes Observed in Money Markets after the Conclusion of the Quantitative Easing Policy Financial Markets Department Bank of Japan September 26 The Bank of Japan released

More information

THE UCLA ANDERSON FORECAST FOR THE NATION

THE UCLA ANDERSON FORECAST FOR THE NATION THE UCLA ANDERSON FORECAST FOR THE NATION June 2009 Report Out of Intensive Care Out of Intensive Care David Shulman Senior Economist UCLA Anderson Forecast June 2009 It s very easy to forget, in your

More information

Market Bulletin. The real story behind wages. February 21, In brief. Wage growth worries

Market Bulletin. The real story behind wages. February 21, In brief. Wage growth worries Market Bulletin February 21, 2018 The real story behind wages In brief Nominal wage growth has not accelerated as expected post-crisis, leaving observers concerned. Structural constraints and persistently

More information

Ryuzo Miyao: Economic activity and prices in Japan and monetary policy

Ryuzo Miyao: Economic activity and prices in Japan and monetary policy Ryuzo Miyao: Economic activity and prices in Japan and monetary policy Summary of a speech by Mr Ryuzo Miyao, Member of the Policy Board of the Bank of Japan, at a meeting with business leaders, Tokushima,

More information

Data Dependence and U.S. Monetary Policy. Remarks by. Richard H. Clarida. Vice Chairman. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

Data Dependence and U.S. Monetary Policy. Remarks by. Richard H. Clarida. Vice Chairman. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System For release on delivery 8:30 a.m. EST November 27, 2018 Data Dependence and U.S. Monetary Policy Remarks by Richard H. Clarida Vice Chairman Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System at The Clearing

More information

Mr Thiessen converses on the conduct of monetary policy in Canada under a floating exchange rate system

Mr Thiessen converses on the conduct of monetary policy in Canada under a floating exchange rate system Mr Thiessen converses on the conduct of monetary policy in Canada under a floating exchange rate system Speech by Mr Gordon Thiessen, Governor of the Bank of Canada, to the Canadian Society of New York,

More information

Does the Riksbank have to make a profit?

Does the Riksbank have to make a profit? SPEECH DATE: 23 January 2015 SPEAKER: First Deputy Governor Kerstin af Jochnick LOCATION: Swedish House of Finance (SHoF), Stockholm SVERIGES RIKSBANK SE-103 37 Stockholm (Brunkebergstorg 11) Tel +46 8

More information

Economic Outlook 2002

Economic Outlook 2002 Economic Outlook 2002 Daniel L. Thornton Vice President and Economic Advisor Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Remarks made at the Annual Power in Partnership Meeting of the Paducah Kentucky Chamber of

More information

Considerations on the Path to Policy Normalization

Considerations on the Path to Policy Normalization Considerations on the Path to Policy Normalization Dennis Lockhart President and Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Southwest Florida Business Leaders Luncheon Hilton Naples Naples,

More information

Notes Numbers in the text and tables may not add up to totals because of rounding. Unless otherwise indicated, years referred to in describing the bud

Notes Numbers in the text and tables may not add up to totals because of rounding. Unless otherwise indicated, years referred to in describing the bud CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE The Budget and Economic Outlook: 4 to 4 Percentage of GDP 4 Surpluses Actual Projected - -4-6 Average Deficit, 974 to Deficits -8-974 979 984 989

More information

Monetary Policy on the Way out of the Crisis

Monetary Policy on the Way out of the Crisis Monetary Policy on the Way out of the Crisis Professor Juergen von Hagen - Bruegel and University of Bonn 1. THE END OF THE CRISIS IS AT HANDS More than two years after the beginning, in August 2007, of

More information

Understanding Quantitative Easing

Understanding Quantitative Easing Macro Theory & Research Understanding Quantitative Easing Cullen O. Roche February 10, 2014 ABSTRACT Many misunderstandings are still circulating about the actual operational aspects and impacts of Quantitative

More information

Written Testimony of Eric S. Rosengren President & Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Boston

Written Testimony of Eric S. Rosengren President & Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Written Testimony of Eric S. Rosengren President & Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Field hearing of the Committee on Financial Services of the U.S. House of Representatives: Seeking

More information